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• What is the future of VoIP?
The market
for VoIP products is established and is in a rapid growth phase. End user demand
is expected to grow rapidly over the next 5 years and according to recent
research, it is expected that VoIP will be deployed by 70% of fortune 1000
companies. The immediate goal for VoIP designers, manufacturers and service
providers is to reproduce existing telephone capabilities at a significantly
lower "total cost of operation" and to offer a technically competitive
alternative to the PSTN. However, telephony over the Internet cannot make
compromises in voice quality, reliability, scalability and manageability. It
must also work seamlessly with telephone systems worldwide. Future extensions
will include innovative new solutions including conference bridging, voice/data
synchronization, combined real-time and message-based services, text-to-speech
conversion and voice response systems.
VOIP "Voice over IP "
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Historically, telephone calls were made through Public Switched Telephone
Networks (PSTN), which provided high-quality voice transmission between two or
more parties. However, since the demand for data traffic is growing faster than
voice traffic, we’ve seen a gradual shift towards packet-based networks like IP,
ATM and Frame Relay. Packet-based networks provides high cost-benefit
ratio and an increasing number of businesses are realizing the value of
transporting their voice circuits over IP networks to reduce expenses. Saving,
coupled with exceptional Quality of Service (QoS), are synonymous with Voice
over IP (VoIP).
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VoIP
systems digitize and transmit analog voice signals as a stream of packets over a
digital data network. IP networks allow each packet to independently find the
most efficient path to the intended destination, thereby using the best
network resources at any given instant. Packets associated with a single source
may take many different paths to the destination when traversing the network.
With the different paths, arrivals will vary greatly due to delays; they may
arrive out of sequence or possibly not arrive at all. At the destination, the
packets are re-assembled and converted back into the original voice signal. VoIP
technology insures proper reconstruction of voice signals, compensating for
echoes made audible due to the end-to-end delay, for jitter and for dropped
packets.
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The IP
network used to support IP telephony can be a standard LAN, a network of leased
facilities or even the Internet. Although very appealing due to cost
considerations, the Internet is constantly plagued by congestion problems and
uncontrollable packet delays and losses. Therefore, dedicated networks
provide a more reliable method of VoIP communications with guaranteed bandwidth
available and manageable Quality of Service.
Why use VoIP?
Originally regarded as a novelty, IP telephony is attracting more and
more users.
VoIP
offers:
Tremendous cost savings relative to the PSTN - Remote offices and users
can bypass longdistance carriers and their per-minute usage rates and run their
voice traffic over the Internet for a flat monthly Internet-access
fee
Integrated infrastructure - Small businesses are able to deploy one
network for voice and datacommunications, further reducing costs.
Scalability - These systems are modular and can be scaled according to
the needs of users.
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